| Literature DB >> 25527147 |
Steven G Luke1, Tim J Smith2, Joseph Schmidt3, John M Henderson3.
Abstract
Saccade latencies are longer prior to an eye movement to a recently fixated location than to control locations, a phenomenon known as oculomotor inhibition of return (O-IOR). There are theoretical reasons to expect that O-IOR would vary in magnitude across different eye movement tasks, but previous studies have produced contradictory evidence. However, this may have been because previous studies have not dissociated O-IOR and a related phenomenon, saccadic momentum, which is a bias to repeat saccade programs that also influences saccade latencies. The present study dissociated the influence of O-IOR and saccadic momentum across three complex visual tasks: scene search, scene memorization, and scene aesthetic preference. O-IOR was of similar magnitude across all three tasks, while saccadic momentum was weaker in scene search.Keywords: O-IOR; eye movements; inhibition of return; saccadic momentum; visual scenes; visual search
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25527147 DOI: 10.1167/14.14.9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Vis ISSN: 1534-7362 Impact factor: 2.240